[0001] The invention relates to an artemisinin compound for use in the treatment of a diabetes
patient, and further the medical use of gephyrin agonistic agents.
BACKGROUND
[0002] Type 1 diabetes patients have often lost all functional beta cells, as indicated
by the complete absence of insulin C-peptide from their serum. Pancreatic islet transplantation
has been shown to be curative in essence, but is limited by the availability of donor
islets, immunological complications and transplant survival . Therefore, attempts
to regenerate patient-specific insulin-producing cells have been undertaken using
different tissue sources, including embryonal stem cells (ES), induced pluripotent
stem cells (iPS), hepatic, exocrine, and alpha cells (Al-Hasani et al., 2013; Collombat
et al., 2009; Zhou et al., 2008). In most cases, the approaches to increase beta cell
mass have relied on the overexpression of master regulatory transcription factors
involved in normal pancreas development, and in only a few cases small molecules or
biologicals have been used. Alpha cells are a particularly attractive starting point
as they are developmentally closely related to beta cells. These cells have been shown
to be able to replenish insulin-producing cell mass following extreme beta cell loss.
In a genetic model, overexpression of the transcription factor Pax4 can convert mouse
alpha cells to beta cells during development (Collombat et al., 2009) and when triggered
in adulthood (Al-Hasani et al., 2013). Molecularly, the beta cell factor Pax4 acts
by directly repressing the alpha cell master regulatory transcription factor Arx and
loss of Arx alone is sufficient to convert alpha into beta cells (Courtney et al.,
2013).
[0003] Some antidiabetic treatments employ plant extracts; more than 800 plants have been
reported to have antihyperglycemic effects with less adverse effects and low toxicity
as compared to synthetic compounds. For example, extraction of aerial parts of
Artemisia indica is e.g. described by Ahmad et al. (2014). Major functions of such extracts are found
to be based on protective effects of major tissues such as kidney, liver and pancreas.
[0004] Artemisinin is a sesquiterpene lactone endoperoxide extracted and isolated from the
leaves of
Artemisia annua, and well-known as an antimalarial medicine. Artemisinin and its derivatives are described
in the WHO monograph on good agricultural and collection practices (GACP) for
Artemisia annua L. (WHO monograph 2006).
[0005] In a completely different field, namely the field of GABA receptors (i.e. receptors
of the gamma-aminobutyric acid, herein called GABAR) which is an ionotropic receptor
and ligand-gated ion channel, and its endogenous ligand which is is gamma-aminobutyric
acid (GABA) the mechanisms of GABAergic synapse formation and plasticity and the role
of GABA receptor in the regulation of adult neurogenesis was subject to investigations
to understand CNS function (Tyagarajan et al., 2010). Gephyrin is considered a scaffolding
molecule of inhibitory synapsis and contributing to GABAR clustering.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0006] It is the objective of the present invention to identify compounds which have a potential
to induce or enhance insulin production in pancreatic cells, and which have the potential
to be used as a medicament based on a novel mode of action.
[0007] The object is solved by the subject of the present invention.
[0008] According to the invention there is provided an artemisinin compound for use in the
treatment of a diabetes patient, which compound is of general formula I

wherein
----- is a single or double bound;
R1, R2, R3, R4, and R6 represent independently from one another H, halogen, -CF3, =CH2, -ORa, -NRaRb, -(CH2)nCOORa, -(CH2)nC(=O)Ra, -(CH2)nCONRaRa, C1-6alkyl, C2-6alkenyl, C2-6alkynyl, C3-7cycloalkyl, C3-7heterocycloalkyl, aryl and heteroaryl; and
R5 represents H, halogen, =O, -ORa, -NRaRb, -(CH2)nCF3, -(CH2)nCHF2, -(CH2)n C(=O)Ra, -O(CH2)nCOORa, -OC(=O)(CH2)nCOORa, -OC(=O)Ra, C1-6alkyl, C2-6alkenyl, C2-6alkynyl, C3-7cycloalkyl, C3-7heterocycloalkyl, aryl and heteroaryl; and
X represents O or -NRa,
Ra represents H or optionally substituted C1-6alkyl, C2-6alkenyl, or C2-6alkynyl; and
Rb represents H or an optionally substituted C1-6alkyl, C2-6alkenyl, C2-6alkynyl, cycloalkyl, aryl, heteroaryl or aralkyl; or
Ra and Rb together with the interjacent nitrogen atom represent a heterocyclic group, wherein
the heterocyclic atom is N, O or S; and wherein the heterocyclic atom is optionally
substituted (artemisone); and
n is 0, 1, 2 or 3.
[0009] The artemisinin compound is specifically used in a method for treating a patient
suffering from diabetes or a diabetes associated disorder, e.g. diabetes type I, diabetes
type 2, a C-peptide negative or positive diabetes, or diabetes-associated disorders.
[0010] Specifically, the compound is administered to the patient in a therapeutically effective
amount, preferably by systemic or local administration.
[0011] According to a specific aspect, the compound is selected from the group consisting
of artelinic acid, artemether, artemotil (arteether, β-arteether), artenimol (dihydroartemisinin,
β-dihydroartemisinin), artemisone, and artesunate, or a pharmaceutically acceptable
salt thereof.
[0012] Specifically, the compound is coupled to a ligand or carrier moiety.
[0013] Specific embodiments refer to the treatment wherein the compound is administered
in a pharmaceutical preparation for oral, parenteral, systemic, mucosal, topic, rectal,
sublingual, buccal or implant use which preparation comprises a pharmaceutically acceptable
carrier, preferably wherein the pharmaceutical preparation is a tablet, dermal or
transdermal formulation, ointment, gel, cream, lotion, patch, solution, injectable,
ophtalmic solution, disperse system, emulsion, microencapsulated drug system, osmotic
pump, subdermal implant, granule, microsphere, modified- release system, targeted
release system, granules, or pill.
[0014] According to a specific aspect, the compound is administered at a dose at least once
per day, preferably at a dose of 0.01 - 2000 mg/day, preferably 0.1 - 500 mg/day,
in a single dose or multiple doses, or wherein the dose is provided in a slow-release
formulation or device. Such doses are specifically indicated for oral administration.
[0015] According to a specific embodiment, the treatment is combined with another anti-diabetic
therapy, preferably treatment with an antidiabetic agent, preferably any of insulin,
sulfonylureas, incretins, other secretagogues, glitazones,metformin, GLP-1 agonists
or DPP4 inhibitors, glucosidease inhibitors, amylin analogs, SGLT2 inhibitors, gastric
bypass surgery or pancreatic island transplantation.
[0016] According to another specific embodiment, the treatment is combined with an immunomodulatory
drug, including vaccine-based approaches using beta cell autoantigens, anti-CD3 antibodies,
anti-CD20 antibodies, anti-CTLA4 antibodies, nicotinamide, rapamycin, cyclosporine
A, azatiopirine, anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG), or prednisolone.
[0017] Specifically, the compound is administered in combination with another gephyrin agonist.
[0018] According to the invention, there is further provided a pharmaceutical combination
preparation, in particular for treating a diabetes patient or any other medical use,
comprising
- a) an artemisinin compound of general formula I; and
- b) another gephyrin agonist which is an agent that
- i) increases the level or clustering of gephyrin; and/or
- ii) increases, enhances, stimulates, or promotes binding of gephyrin to the receptor
of the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABAR); and/or
- iii) increases gephyrin-mediated signaling of the GABAR.
[0019] According to the invention, there is further provided a method for identifying a
lead candidate agent that is effective in treating diabetes in a patient, the method
comprising: screening one or more test agents in a cell-based assay, comprising the
steps:
- a) providing a pancreatic alpha-cell or a pancreatic beta-cell that overexpresses
ARX;
- b) contacting the cell with a test agent; and
- c) detecting if the test agent
- i) increases insulin expression by said cell; and/or
- ii) represses ARX in said cell; and/or
- iii) increases the level or clustering of gephyrin; and/or
- iv) increases gephyrin-mediated signaling of the GABAR;
thereby identifying a lead candidate agent for treating diabetes.
[0020] Specifically, the test agent is selected from the group consisting of small molecules,
peptides, proteins, protein domains, such as antibodies or antibody fragments, aptamers,
and nucleic acids, preferably a test agent obtained by screening a library of test
agents.
[0021] According to the invention, there is further provided a method of identifying a lead
candidate agent for medical use, the method comprising: screening one or more test
agents in a cell-based assay, comprising the steps:
- a) contacting a mammalian cell with a test agent under conditions allowing interaction
of the test agent with gephyrin produced by the cell; and
- b) determining if the test agent
- i) increases the level or clustering of gephyrin; and/or
- ii) increases, enhances, stimulates, or promotes binding of gephyrin to GABAR; and/or
- iii) increases gephyrin-mediated signaling of the GABAR,
thereby identifying a lead candidate agent for medical use, in particular for the
treatment of diabetes or anti-diabetic use.
[0022] According to the invention, there is further provided a gephyrin binding active agent,
for use in the treatment of a diabetes patient, preferably wherein the active agent
is a small molecule. Exemplary gephyrin binding small molecules are e.g. any of the
artemisinin compounds of the invention.
[0023] According to the invention, there is further provided a gephyrin binding active agent
for medical use, except an agent which is an artemisinin compound for anti-infectious
or antimicrobial use. Optional further exceptions would be prior art artemisinin compounds
for treatment of skin diseases, cancer, Trauma Haemorrhage and Associated Conditions,
Myocardial Infarction and Coronary Heart Disease, Hemorrhoids, Alzheimer Disease,
Crohn's Disease. Specific exceptions would refer to an artemisinin compound for anti-infectious
or antimicrobial use, or optionally for use in the treatment of one or more of the
diseases selected from the group consisting of skin diseases, cancer, Trauma Haemorrhage
and Associated Conditions, Myocardial Infarction and Coronary Heart Disease, Hemorrhoids,
Alzheimer Disease, and Crohn's Disease, wherein the artemisinin compound is selected
from the group consisting of artelinic acid, artemether, artemotil, artenimol, artemisone
and artesunate, or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof, or specifically wherein
said artemisinin compound is any artemisinin compound of formula I. Specifically such
gephyrin binding active agent is any other than an artemisinin compound for use in
the treatment of malaria or an infectious disease.
[0024] According to one aspect, any such gephyrin binding active agent including artemisinin
compounds and/or any other gephyrin binding active agent may be used for treatment
of a diabetic patient.
[0025] According to a further specific aspect, any such gephyrin binding active agent including
artemisinin compounds and/or any other gephyrin binding active agent may be used for
treating a patient suffering from medical disorder or disease other than diabetes,
however, excluding anti-infectious or antimicrobial use, optionally further excluding
treatment of skin diseases or cancer.
[0026] Exemplary medical use other than anti-diabetic use is for treatment of autoimmune
disease, a neurological disorder including temporal lobe epilepsy, sleep disorders,
panic attacks, seizures, muscle spasms, Moco deficiency or alcoholism.
[0027] According to a further specific aspect, any such gephyrin binding active agent other
than artemisinin compounds may be used for treatment of a diabetic patient or a patient
suffering from any other medical disorder or disease. Exemplary medical use other
than anti-diabetic use is anti-infectious or antimicrobial use, e.g. including treatment
of an infectious disease, such as malaria, or for treatment of autoimmune disease,
a neurological disorder including temporal lobe epilepsy, sleep disorders, panic attacks,
seizures, muscle spasms, Moco deficiency or alcoholism.
[0028] According to a specific aspect, there is further provided a pharmaceutical preparation
comprising a gephyrin binding agent as an active agent, and a pharmaceutically acceptable
carrier, which agent is any other than an artemisinin compound, for example any other
than an artemisinin compound which is selected from the group consisting of artelinic
acid, artemether, artemotil, artenimol, artemisone and artesunate, or a pharmaceutically
acceptable salt thereof, or specifically any other than an artemisinin compound which
is any artemisinin compound of formula I.
[0029] According to a specific aspect, the invention further provides for a pharmaceutical
combination product comprising
- a) a gephyrin binding agent, such as preferably an artemisinin compound; and
- b) an antidiabetic agent, such as preferably any of insulin, sulfonylureas, incretins,
other secretagogues, glitazones,metformin, GLP-1 agonists, DPP4 inhibitors, glucosidease
inhibitors, amylin analogs, or SGLT2 inhibitors,
and/or
- c) an immunomodulatory drug, including vaccine-based approaches using beta cell autoantigens,
anti-CD3 antibodies, anti-CD20 antibodies, anti-CTLA4 antibodies, nicotinamide, rapamycin,
cyclosporine A, azatiopirine, anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG), or prednisolone.
[0030] Such combination product may specifically be provided as a mixture, or as a kit of
parts.
FIGURES
[0031]
Figure 1. A cellular model model for pancreatic transdifferenation by PAX4 and ARX. a. Inducibility of GFP (control), PAX4 and ARX following 24 hours induction of the Myc-tagged
overexpression constructs by 1 ug/ml doxycycline in conditional Min6-tet on cell lines.
Histone H2B is used as a loading control. b. Western blots with antibodies detecting
the overexpressed ARX and PAX4 proteins. ARX overexpression appears to reduce levels
of endogenous PAX4 as detected after long exposure. c. Analysis of RNA-Sequencing data in these cell lines, indicating transcript abundance
of PAX4 and ARX determined as reads per kilobase per million (RPKM). d. Venn diagram representing genes significantly changed (p-value < 0.05) between transcription
factor induced and GFP induced cells at 24 hours. e. Ngn3 RNA levels are oppositelty regulated after 24 h ARX and PAX4overexpression.
f. Ngn3 protein detected by immunofluorescence is upregultated following ARX overexpression
for 24 h. g. Log2-fold expression change of pancreatic endocrine factors upon Arx overexpression
for 144 hours, investigated by RNA-seq in three different single cell clones.
Figure 2. A high throughput screen for functional repressors of ARX a. ARX overexpression for 3 days in Min6 cells lowers insulin protein levels as deteted
by immunofluorescence staining. *, p<0.01 compared to uninduced cells. b. Overview of screening data in Min6 cells induced to overexpress ARX. c. Validation of hits from the primary screen by immunofluorescence staining of alpha
cell line aTC1 for insulin protein.d. Artemether treatment increases insulin protein
levels in alphaTC1 cells, detected by immunofluorescence. *, p<0.01 compared to control.
Figure 3. Activity of artemisinins in alpha cells. a. Artesunate is also active in inducing insulin expression in alpha cell. b. Artemisin
analog deoxyarteether lacking the endoperoxie moiety is inactive. c. Dose response of artemether in Min6 cells overexpressing ARX detected by immunofluorescence.
d. Dose response of artemether in inducing insulin expression in alpha cell detected
by immunofluorescence.
Figure 4. Gephyrin is a mammalian target of artemisinins a. Outline of the chemical proteomics assay. b. List of proteins identified with at least 20 spectra and greater then 2-fold enrichment
over the competition experiment. c. Artemether increases gephyrin protein levels in alpha cells. d. Artemether treatment increases Moco synthase activity of gephyrin. e. Artemether increases intracellular chloride concentration.
Figure 5. Artemisinins stabilize gephyrin and activate GABA signaling. a. Western blots for gephyrin and GABA receptor subunits in aTC1 cells treated with
artemether. b. Western blot for GABAR in aTC1 cells treated with artemether. c. Gene set enrichtment analysis of GO terms associated with genes up-regulated by Artemether
treatment of aTC1 cells. d. GABAR antagonist Bicuculine inhibits the effects of Artemether on aTC1 cells, detected
by immunofluorescence. *, p<0.01 compared to Artemether-only treated cells. e. GABAR antagonist Gabazine inhibits the effects of Artemether on aTC1 cells, detected
by immunofluorescence. *, p<0.01 compared to Artemether-only treated cells.e. GABAR agonist Thiagabine increases insulin production in aTC1 cells, detected by
immunofluorescence. *, p<0.01 compared to control.
Figure 6. Artemether induces cell type changes in human pancreatic islets. a. Immunofluorescence staining for insulin and glucagon in human islets with Artemether
and control DMSO treatment for 72 hours. b. Quantification of gephyrin and GABA receptor abundance measured by immunofluorescence
staining of human islets after 72 h treatment with Artemether and control DMSO. c. Glucose-stimulated insulin sectretion measured by ELISA of supernatants from human
islets after 72 h treatment with Artemether and control DMSO. d. quantification of insulin/glucagon double-positive cells in human pancreatic islets.
Figure 7: Primer sequences
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0032] The term "active agent" is herein understood in the following way. The active agent
as described herein for medical use is particularly a small molecule or any suitable
peptide, including polypeptides, proteins, including fragments of proteins, such as
protein domains, in particular antibodies and antibody fragments or antibody domains,
alternative scaffold binders, aptamers and nucleic acids.
[0033] For example, an active agent may be a molecule that may be synthesised by the techniques
of organic chemistry, or by techniques of molecular biology or biochemistry, and is
preferably a small molecule, which may be of less than 5000 Daltons and which may
be water-soluble. An active agent as described herein may be an artemisinin compound
and/or particularly exhibit features of selective interaction with gephyrin, e.g.
similar to the agonistic activity of the artemisinin compounds of the invention.
[0034] The term "administration" as used herein shall include routes of introducing an active
agent, such as an artemisinin compound or a candidate agent of the invention to a
subject in need thereof to perform their intended function. Examples of routes of
administration that may be used include oral administration. The agent can also be
administered by any other convenient route, for example, by continuous infusion or
bolus injection, by absorption through epithelial or mucocutaneous linings (e.g.,
oral, rectal, vaginal, and intestinal mucosa, etc.) and can be administered together
with another therapeutic agent. Administration can be systemic or local. Various known
delivery systems, including encapsulation in liposomes, microparticles, microcapsules,
and capsules, can be used. Specific delivery systems employ patches for topical, transdermal
or mucosal delivery, or implants. Specifically preferred are slow-release preparations
or formulations and delivery systems to provide for the long-acting treatment.
[0035] Methods of administration of the active agent of this invention include, but are
not limited to, intradermal, intramuscular, intraperitoneal, intravenous, subcutaneous,
intranasal, epidural, oral, sublingual, intracerebral, intravaginal, transdermal,
rectal, by inhalation, or topical. The active agent can be administered alone, or
in combination or conjunction with either another agent or any other therapeutic treatment
used in the indication, e.g. used to treat diabetes patients. The active agent can
be administered prior to the administration of the other agent, simultaneously with
the agent, or after the administration of the agent. Furthermore, the active agent
of the invention can also be administered in a pro-drug form which is converted into
its active metabolite, or more active metabolite in vivo. An alternative delivery
system provide for the active agent associated with or bound to a carrier molecule,
which is e.g. targeting a specific site of action. Exemplary delivery systems employ
artemisinin compounds which are attached to iron-binding molecules and cell receptor-targeting
molecules for selective delivery of a therapeutically effective amount into target
disease cells, such carrier molecules for targeted delivery. Further examples refer
to delivery of conjugates comprising at least two artemisinin compounds, or conjugates
with other agents, including e.g. (pro)hormones or peptides, such as glucagon-like
peptide 1 (GLP-1).
[0036] The term "agonist" in relation to gephyrin or gephyrin activity as used herein shall
specifically refer to a compound or an agent capable of combining with (e.g., binding
to, interacting with) gephyrin to initiate pharmacological actions. The agonistic
activity of a test agent is specifically proven by any of the exemplary assays as
described herein.
[0037] The term "artemisinin compound" as used herein shall specifically refer to artemisinin
and artemisinin derivatives.
[0038] Artemisinin ((3
R,5a
S,6
R,8a
S,9
R,12
S,12a
R)-octahydro-3,6,9-trimethyl-3,12-epoxy-12
H-pyrano[4,3-
j]-1,2-benzodioxepin-10(3
H)-one) contains a 1,2,4-trioxane ring structure, and
Artemisia annua and related
Artemisia species are known to be the only natural source. It has the following structure:

[0039] Artemisinin derivatives specifically are understood as endoperoxides with a variety
of residues, such as described in formula I herein. Exemplary compounds are selected
from the group consisting of artelinic acid, artemether, artemotil (also referred
to as arteether, β-arteether), artenimol (also referred to as dihydroartemisinin,
β-dihydroartemisinin) and artesunate, or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof,
or derivatives or simplified analogs thereof.
[0040] Besides natural artemisinin compounds, semisynthetic or synthetic derivatives may
be used, e.g. with improved solubilty or bioavailability. Specifically, synthetic
compounds with a similar trioxolane structure, such as arterolane, may also be used.
[0041] Specific derivatives include artemisone, dihydroartemisinin hemisuccinate, dihydrodroartemisinin
succinate, dihydro-artemisinin glucuronide, sodium artesunate, stabilized forms of
artesunate, stabilized forms of sodium artesunate, dihydroartemisitene dimers, 11-aza-artemisinin
derivatives, amino-functionalized 1,2,4-trioxanes, artemisinin endoperoxides, deoxy-artemisinins,
spiro and dispiro 1,2,4-trioxolane, mixed steroidal 1,2,4,5-tetraoxane compounds,
substituted 1,2,4-trioxanes, Artemisia annua extracts or fractions of such extracts,
trioxane derivatives based on artemisinin, seco-acrtemisinins, trioxane dimer compounds,
conjugates of artelinic acid arteethers from dihydroartemisinin, artemisinine or artemisinene
derivatives, C-10 carbon substituted artemisinin-like trioxane compounds, water-soluble
trioxanes alpha arteether, artemisinin dimers, (+)-deoxoarteminisinin and analogs
of (+)-deoxoartemisinin, and 10-substituted derivatives of dihydroartemisinin, as
well as its salts or other derivatives thereof as known to one of skill in the art.
[0042] Specific derivatives may be obtained by dimerization or oligomerization, with or
without using a linker, conjugation to other moieties, such as peptides, carriers
or delivery agents, including receptor targeting molecules, combination with chelators
that bind metal ions.
[0043] The term "diabetes" as used herein is specifically understood as a disease or disease
disorder associated with Diabetes mellitus, irrespective of the genesis, specifically
including diabetes Type I and Type II, C-peptide negative and positive diabetes, and
associated disorders, including diabetic ketoacetosis, hyperglycemic hyperosmolar
state, diabetic cardiomyopathy, diabetic nephropathy, diabetic encephalopathy, diabetic
neuropathy, diabetic retinopathy, coronary artery disease, peripheral vascular disease,
diabete myonecrosis, stroke, diabetic coma, and obesity.
[0044] Type I diabetes mellitus (also called juvenile diabetes) is a form of diabetes mellitus
that results from the autoimmune destruction of the insulin-producing beta cells in
the pancreas. Type II diabetes mellitus, which has both insulin- dependent and non-insulin-dependent
types, typically appears later in a person's life as a result of improper diet, lack
of exercise, or a combination thereof. Both forms of diabetes mellitus alter the body's
ability to take up and metabolize blood glucose, leading to elevated levels of blood
glucose. Chronically high levels of blood glucose may increase the risk for diabetes
associated disorders, such as long-term vascular complications, e.g. coronary disease,
heart attack, stroke, heart failure, kidney failure, blindness, erectile dysfunction,
neuropathy (loss of sensation, especially in the feet), gangrene, and gastroparesis
(slowed emptying of the stomach). Improper blood glucose control also increases the
risk of short-term complications after surgery, such as poor wound healing.
[0045] The connecting peptide, or C-peptide, is a short 31-amino-acid protein that connects
insulin's A-chain to its B-chain in the proinsulin molecule. Newly diagnosed diabetes
patients often get their C-peptide levels measured as a means of distinguishing Type
I diabetes and Type II diabetes.
[0046] Specific embodiments of the invention refer to treatment of diabetes, in particular
diabetes type I or II, or C-peptide negative diabetes, or a disorder associated with
an increased blood glucose level, e.g. including metabolic and insulin resistance
disorders, such as any of the diabetes associated disorders as mentioned above or
obesity in a patient suffering from diabetes or the respective disorder. Such anti-diabetes
treatment specifically employs a pharmaceutical preparation of any of the artemisinin
compounds of the invention or any other gephyrin agonist, specifically by a regimen
of a gephyrin agonist exhibiting and formulated for sustained release and slow uptake
to the patient's circulation when administered.
[0047] The term "lead" with respect to an active agent or a candidate agent is well known
in the art, and shall refer to the meaning that an agent was selected for developing
a pharmaceutical product, because its potential was proven by some assays, however,
it would need to be further characterized by further tests and (preclinical or clinical)
investigations to confirm its suitability to be used as a drug.
[0048] Test agents are typically characterized by appropriate test systems whether they
are suitable used as an active agent for medical use.
[0049] Typically, if the candidate agent interacts with gephyrin, such as to agonize its
activity, or causes increased insulin expression by a pancreatic cell, e.g. as determined
in a test system further described herein as compared to the activity or expression
in the absence of the candidate agent, that candidate agent is characterized as a
"lead candidate agent". Further, the lead candidate agent may be validated using an
assay capable of demonstrating advantageous activities and properties to determine
its potential to be used as a therapeutically active agent.
[0050] Such tests may be qualitatitive, quantitative or semi-quantitative.
[0051] The term "subject" as used herein shall refer to a warm-blooded mammalian, particularly
a human being or a non-human mammalian animal, including dogs, cats, apes, pigs, sheep,
and horses. In particular, the medical use of the invention or the respective method
of treatment applies to a subject in need of prophylaxis or treatment of a disease
condition (which includes a disease or disorder associated with such disease). The
subject may be a patient suffering from disease, including early stage or late stage
disease. The term "patient" includes human and other mammalian subjects that receive
either prophylactic or therapeutic treatment. The term "treatment" is thus meant to
include both prophylactic and therapeutic treatment.
[0052] A subject is e.g. treated for prophylaxis or therapy of diabetes or disorders associated
with diabetes. Thus, specific embodiments refer to treatment of patients suffering
from diabetes.
[0053] The term "pharmaceutically acceptable" as used herein refers to, for example, compounds,
materials, compositions, and/or dosage forms which are suitable for use in contact
with or in human beings and animals without excessive toxicity, irritation, allergic
response, or other problems or complications, commensurate with a reasonable benefit/risk
ratio.
[0054] The active agent of the invention may e.g. be formulated in an effective amount with
a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier or diluent. Pharmaceutically acceptable carriers
generally include any and all suitable solvents, dispersion media, coatings, antibacterial
and antifungal agents, isotonic and absorption delaying agents, and the like that
are physiologically compatible with an active agent or related composition or combination
provided by the invention. Further examples of pharmaceutically acceptable carriers
include sterile water, saline, phosphate buffered saline, dextrose, glycerol, ethanol,
and the like, as well as combinations of any thereof.
[0055] In one such aspect, an active agent can be combined with one or more carriers appropriate
for a desired route of administration, active agents may be, e.g. admixed with any
of lactose, sucrose, starch, cellulose esters of alkanoic acids, stearic acid, talc,
magnesium stearate, magnesium oxide, sodium and calcium salts of phosphoric and sulphuric
acids, acacia, gelatin, sodium alginate, polyvinylpyrrolidine, polyvinyl alcohol,
and optionally further tableted or encapsulated for conventional administration.
[0056] Examplary formulations as used for parenteral administration include subcutaneous,
intramuscular or intravenous injection as, for example, a sterile solution or suspension.
Formulations for topical application include a number of forms such as creams or ointments,
patches, pastes and gels.
[0057] Preferred pharmaceutically-acceptable carriers include vehicles, like sugars, such
as lactose, glucose and sucrose, starches, such as corn starch and potato starch,
cellulose and its derivatives, such as sodium carboxymethyl cellulose, ethyl cellulose
and cellulose acetate, or polyols, such as glycerin, sorbitol, mannitol and polyethylene
glycol, or other diluents and excipients known in the art to be employed in pharmaceutical
formulations. Suitable examples of liquid carriers for oral and parenteral administration
include water, particular containing additives as above, e.g. cellulose derivatives,
including sodium carboxymethyl cellulose solution, alcohols including monohydric alcohols
and polyhydric alcohols and their derivatives, and oils. The physiologically acceptable
excipients can be saline, gelatin, starch, talc, keratin, colloidal silica, urea and
the like. In addition, auxiliary, stabilizing, thickening, lubricating, and coloring
agents can be used.
[0058] The active agent(s) may also be formulated so as to provide sustained or controlled
release of the active ingredient therein using, for example, hydropropylmethyl cellulose,
other polymer matrices, gels, permeable membranes, osmotic systems, multilayer coatings,
microparticles, liposomes, microspheres, or a combination thereof to provide the desired
release profile in varying proportions. The active agent can also be in micro-encapsulated
form, with one or more of the above-described excipients.
[0059] For example, an effective amount is provided in a pharmaceutically-acceptable formulation
that provides sustained delivery of the compound of the invention to a subject for
at least 12 hours, 24 hours, 36 hours, 48 hours, one week, two weeks, three weeks,
or four weeks after the pharmaceutically-acceptable formulation is administered to
the subject.
[0060] In certain embodiments, slow-release formulation pharmaceutical compositions are
suitable for mucosal, subcutaneous bolus or implants, topical or oral administration
to a subject, including tablets, lozenges, buccal forms, troches, aqueous or oily
suspensions or solutions, granules, powders, pastes, emulsions, capsules, syrups elixirs,
liposomal formulations, drug-polymer conjugates or nanoparticle formulations.
[0061] Additional pharmaceutically acceptable carriers and pharmaceutical compositions are
known in the art and described in, e.g. REMINGTON'S PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES.
[0062] Specific pharmaceutical compositions are contemplated wherein an active agents, such
as an artemisinin compound of the present invention and one or more pharmaceutically
acceptable carriers and optionally one or more further therapeutically active agents
are formulated. Stable formulations of the active agent are prepared for storage by
mixing said agent having the desired degree of purity with optional pharmaceutically
acceptable carriers, excipients or stabilizers, in the form of lyophilized formulations
or aqueous solutions.
[0063] The term "screening" as used herein shall refer to identification of a candidate
agent which specifically passes a screening test, e.g. to agonise gephyrin activity,
which is indicative that the candidate agent is a potential therapeutic active agent
that may be useful in the treatment of a disease or disorder, such as diabetes. For
example, the screening assays described herein are useful for identifying a lead candidate
agent from a plurality of test agents. According to a specific aspect, a direct binding
assay is provided which determines the interaction of a test agent with gephyrin.
[0064] The capability of a test agent to bind to or interact with gephyrin may be measured
by any method of detecting/measuring a protein/protein interaction or other compound/protein
interaction. Specific methods of identifying an agent that are capable of binding
to gephyrin are ones where gephyrin is exposed to the agent and any binding of the
agent to gephyrin is detected and/or measured. The binding constant for the binding
of the agent to gephyrin may be determined. Suitable methods for detecting and/or
measuring (quantifying) the binding of an agent to gephyrin are well known in the
art and may be performed, for example, using co-purification, ELISA, co-immunoprecipitation,
isothermal titration calorimitry, differential scanning fluorimetry (Thermofluor),
fluorescence polarization, fluorescence resonance energy transfer, scintillation proximity
assays and surface plasmon resonance methods, and specifically a method capable of
high throughput operation, for example a chip-based method.
[0065] Further methods of detecting polypeptide/polypeptide interactions include ultrafiltration
with ion spray mass spectroscopy/HPLC methods or other physical and analytical methods.
Fluorescence Energy Resonance Transfer (FRET) methods, for example, may be used as
well, in which binding of two fluorescent labelled entities may be measured by measuring
the interaction of the fluorescent labels when in close proximity to each other.
[0066] According to another specific aspect, the level or clustering of gephyrin is determined
by measuring the amount and intracellular location of gephyrin in an immunofluorescence
assay using a primary antibody specifically recognizing gephyrin, either directly
labeled with a flurophore or other appropriate signal-generating molecule (e.g. horseradish
peroxidase, luciferase) or indirect detection with a similarly labeled secondary antibody.
Alternative detection methods include immunochemical or mass-spectrometric quantification
of gephyrin in lysates generated from whole cells or specific membrane-enrichted fractions.
A further alternative method includes the direct labeling of gephyrin with green fluorescent
protein or another cellularly encoded fluorophore or otherwise easily detectable tag
by knocking-in the coding sequence into the endogenous gephyrin locus.
[0067] According to another specific aspect, the increase, enhancement, stimulation, or
promotion of binding gephyrin to GABAR is determined as follows: Using co-immunoprecipitation,
anti-gephyrin antibodies are used to imminoprecipitate gephryin, and associated GABA
receptor is measured by Western blot or ELISA. Alternative methods include the use
for tagged proteins and detection by Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer FRET or
alternative assays e.g. LUMIERE.
[0068] According to another specific aspect, the increase of gephyrin-mediated signaling
of the GABAR is determined as follows: Directly by measuring the resuling influx of
chloride ions into the cell using e.g. chloride sensitive dyes e.g. N-(6-methoxyquinolyl)-acetoethyl
ester (MQAE) or indirectly by electrophysiological measurement of the cell's membrane
potential or the resulting intracellular changes in gene expression.
[0069] Exemplary assays to test gephyrin agonist acitivity of a test agent are based on
the determination of its activity to
- i) increase the level or clustering of gephyrin; and/or
- ii) increase, enhances, stimulates, or promotes binding of gephyrin to GABAR; and/or
- iii) to increase gephyrin-mediated signaling of the GABAR.
[0070] Such assays are e.g. direct binding assays, immunofluorescence staining assays, immunochemical
methods, biophysical methods or electrophysiological methods.
[0071] For example, a suitable binding assay is further described in the examples below.
[0072] Specific test agents may be screened for their potential to be used for treatment
of diabetes. Therefore, specific screening tests may be used which are cell-based
assays. Exemplary assays to test the anti-diabetic activity of a test agent are based
on its activity to express insulin in a pancreatic cell, particularly, an alpha-cell
or a beta-cell that overexpresses ARX, to determine if the test agent
- i) increases insulin expression by said cell; and/or
- ii) represses ARX in said cell; and/or
- iii) increases the level or clustering of gephyrin; and/or
- iv) increases gephyrin-mediated signaling of the GABAR.
[0073] For example, a suitable insulin expression assay is further described in the examples
below.
[0074] Optionally, the screening method may include repeating the method steps of a test,
e.g. in a high throughput screen. Thereby a plurality of candidate agents may be tested
to identify a lead candidate agent for medical use.
[0075] For example, combinatorial chemical libraries or chemical libraries, including collections
of diverse chemical compounds generated by either chemical synthesis or biological
synthesis, for example, linear combinatorial chemical libraries such as polypeptide
or peptide libraries may be used as a source of test agents. Such library members,
chemical species or subclasses, may be selected that display a desired characteristic
activity, for example, capable of agonistically binding to gephyrin, or increase the
expression of insulin in pancreatic cells (in an in vitro or ex vivo assay).
[0076] It is appreciated that the identification of an agent that binds to or interacts
with gephyrin may be an initial step in a drug screening pathway, and the identified
agent may be further characterized and selected e.g. for the ability to agonise gephyrin
activity. Therefore, the method of the invention may further include assaying a lead
candidate agent in an activity assay to determine whether the lead candidate agent
would qualify for a therapeutically active agent.
[0077] The term "effective amount" as used herein is intended to mean that amount of a compound
that is sufficient to treat, prevent or inhibit such diseases or disorder. In the
context of disease, therapeutically effective amounts of an active agent as described
herein are specifically used to prevent, treat, modulate, attenuate, reverse, or affect
a disease or condition that benefits from an interaction of the active agent with
cellular components or molecules, e.g. including interactions with gephyrin, and specifically
diabetes. The term specifically includes both, therapeutically and prophylactically
effective amounts.
[0078] The term "prophylactically effective amount" specifically refers to an amount of
an active agent, which is effective, upon single or multiple dose administration to
the patient, in preventing or treating a disease or disorder.
[0079] The amount of the active agent that will correspond to such an effective amount will
vary depending on various factors, such as the given drug or compound, the pharmaceutical
formulation, the route of administration, the type of disease or disorder, the identity
of the subject or host being treated, and the like, but can nevertheless be routinely
determined by one skilled in the art.
[0080] A therapeutically effective amount of an active agent which is an artemisinin compound
as described herein, such as provided to a human patient in need thereof, may specifically
be in the range of 0.01 - 2000 mg/day, preferably 0.1 - 500 mg/day, in a single dose
or multiple doses. Specific embodiments refer to slow-release formulations or devices,
which may be advantegously employed to administer the active agent over a prolonged
period of time, such as for treatment of chronic disease, e.g. a treatment over at
least 2 weeks, at least 3 weeks or at least 4 weeks. In a specific embodiment, a slow
release formulation provides for a blood level of an artemisinin compound, which is
in the range of 0.01-500 mg/day constantly over the entire treatment period. In another
specific embodiment, such concentrations are reached intermittently, e.g. in a repetated
regimen of 1 week on-treatment, 1 off-treatment. In another embodiment, the specific
formulation results in the selective enrichment for the active agent in the pancreas
or pancreatic islets in the absence of detectable blood levels.
[0081] A treatment or prevention regime of a subject with a therapeutically effective amount
of the active substance of the present invention may consist of a single administration,
or alternatively comprise a series of applications. For example, the active agent
may be administered at least once a year, at least once a half-year or at least once
a month. However, in another embodiment, the active agent may be administered to the
subject from about one time per week to about a daily administration for a given treatment.
The length of the treatment period depends on a variety of factors, such as the severity
of the disease, either acute or chronic disease, the age of the patient, the concentration
and the activity of the active agent. It will also be appreciated that the effective
dosage used for the treatment or prophylaxis may increase or decrease over the course
of a particular treatment or prophylaxis regime. Changes in dosage may result and
become apparent by standard diagnostic assays known in the art. In some instances,
chronic administration may be required.
[0082] The biological properties of the artemisinin compound or the active agent and pharmaceutical
preparations of the invention may be characterized ex vivo in cell, tissue, and whole
organism experiments. As is known in the art, drugs are often tested in vivo in animals,
including but not limited to mice, rats, rabbits, dogs, cats, pigs, and monkeys, in
order to measure a drug's efficacy for treatment against a disease or disease model,
or to measure a drug's pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, toxicity, and other properties.
The animals may be referred to as disease models. Therapeutics are often tested in
mice, including but not limited to nude mice, SCID mice, non-obese diabetic (NOD)
mice, xenograft mice, and transgenic mice (including knockins and knockouts). Such
experimentation may provide meaningful data for determination of the potential of
an active agent to be used as a therapeutic or as a prophylactic. Any organism, preferably
mammals, may be used for testing. For example because of their genetic similarity
to humans, primates, monkeys can be suitable therapeutic models, and thus may be used
to test the efficacy, toxicity, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, half-life, or
other property of the subject agent or composition. Tests in humans are ultimately
required for approval as drugs, and thus of course these experiments are contemplated.
Thus, the active agent and respective pharmaceutical compositions of the present invention
may be tested in humans to determine their therapeutic or prophylactic efficacy, toxicity,
immunogenicity, pharmacokinetics, and/or other clinical properties.
[0083] According to the invention preferred active agents, such as small molecule artemisinin
compounds are those commercially available compounds that have been used in anti-malarial
or anti-viral therapy for a different purpose, like Arteether; Artemotil; Artemether;
Artemisone; Artesunate; Artemisinin; Artemisitene; Artelinic acid; 9-epi-artemisinin;
Dihydroartemisinin; Dihydro Artemisinin Dimer; Dihydroartemisinin Glucuronide; 3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-ol;
(3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,12R,12aR)-Decahydro-3,6,9-trimethyl-3,12-epoxy-12H-pyrano[4; 3,12-Epoxy-12H-pyrano[4,3-j]-1,2-benzodioxepin-10(3H)-one,
octahydro-3,6,9-trimethyl-; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-ol;
3,12-Epoxy-12H-pyrano[4,3-j]-1,2-benzodioxepin-10(3H)-one, octahydro-3,6,8-trimethyl-,
(3R,5aS,6R,8R,12S,12aR)-; 3,12-Epoxy-12H-pyrano[4,3-j]-1,2-benzodioxepin-10-ol, decahydro-3,6,9-trimethyl-,
(3S,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-Decahydro-10-ethoxy-3,6,9-trimethyl-3,12-epoxy-12H-pyrano[4,3-j]-1,2-benzodioxepine;
3,12-Epoxy-12H-pyrano[4,3-j]-1,2-benzodioxepin, 10-fluorodecahydro-3,6,9-trimethyl-,
(3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10R,12S,12aR)-; 3,12-Epoxy-12H-pyrano[4,3-j]-1,2-benzodioxepin-10-ol,
decahydro-10-d-3,6,9-trimethyl-, (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-(9Cl); 4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanoic
acid; Butanedioic acid, 1-[(3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10R,12R,12aR)-decahydro-3,6,9-trimethyl-3,12-epoxy-12H-pyrano[4,3-j]-1,2-benzodioxepin-10-yl]
ester; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-(isobutylamino)-4-oxobutanoate; 2,5-dioxopyrrolidin-1-yl ((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)
succinate; N,N-Dimethyl-N-[2-[(3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethylperhydro-3,12-epoxypyrano[4,3-j]-1,2-benzodioxepin-10-yloxy]ethyl]amine
oxalate; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-oxo-4-((1-phenylethyl)amino)butanoate; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-((4-methoxybenzyl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate; 6-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)hexanoic
acid; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-((cyclohexylmethyl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-((furan-2-ylmethyl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate; 2-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)propanoic
acid; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-((4-fluorophenethyl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-((2,2-dimethoxyethyl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-((4-hydroxyphenethyl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-((4-methoxyphenethyl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-oxo-4-((pyridin-4-ylmethyl)amino)butanoate; 3-hydroxy-2-(4-(4-oxo-4-(((5aS,6R,12S)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)butanamido)butanoic
acid; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-((2-(1 H-indol-3-yl)ethyl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate; 4-((4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)methyl)benzoic
acid; 4-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)-3-phenylbutanoic
acid; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-((2-(1H-imidazol-5-yl)ethyl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate; (5aS,6R,12S)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-((4-((2,5-dioxopyrrolidin-1-yl)oxy)-4-oxobutyl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-oxo-4-(((tetrahydrofuran-2-yl)methyl)amino)butanoate; 3-(1H-indol-3-yl)-2-(4-(4-oxo-4-(((5aS,6R,12S)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)butanamido)propanoic
acid; 4-(methylthio)-2-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)butanoic
acid; 5-amino-5-oxo-2-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)pentanoic
acid; 2-((S)-4-methyl-2-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)pentanamido)acetic
acid; (S)-3-methyl-2-(4-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)butanamido)butanoic
acid; Butanoic acid, 4-[[2-(3,4-dihydroxyphenyl)ethyl]amino]-4-oxo-, (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-decahydro-3,6,9-trimethyl-3,12-epoxy-12H-pyrano[4,3-j]-1,2-benzodioxepin-10-yl
ester; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-(((S)-3-(1H-indol-3-yl)-1-methoxy-1-oxopropan-2-yl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate; (S)-2-((S)-4-methyl-2-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)pentanamido)propanoic
acid; (S)-2-((S)-4-methyl-2-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)pentanamido)pentanedioic
acid; (S)-3-methyl-2-((S)-4-methyl-2-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)pentanamido)butanoic
acid; (S)-2-((S)-4-methyl-2-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,105,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)pentanamido)-3-phenylpropanoic
acid; (S)-4-methyl-2-((S)-4-methyl-2-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)pentanamido)pentanoic
acid; 3-(2,2-dimethyltetrahydro-2H-pyran-4-yl)-3-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)propanoic
acid; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-(((S)-1-((4-hydroxyphenethyl)amino)-4-methyl-1-oxopentan-2-yl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate;
(R)-3-mercapto-2-((S)-4-methyl-2-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)pentanamido)propanoic
acid; (2S,3R)-3-methyl-2-((S)-4-methyl-2-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)pentanamido)pentanoic
acid; (S)-3-(1H-indol-3-yl)-2-((S)-4-methyl-2-(4-oxo-4-(((3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl)oxy)butanamido)pentanamido)propanoic
acid; (3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-(((S)-1-(((S)-1-ethoxy-3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-1-oxopropan-2-yl)amino)-4-methyl-1-oxopentan-2-yl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate;
(3R,5aS,6R,8aS,9R,10S,12R,12aR)-3,6,9-trimethyldecahydro-3H-3,12-epoxy[1,2]dioxepino[4,3-i]isochromen-10-yl
4-(((S)-1-(((S)-3-(1H-indol-3-yl)-1-methoxy-1-oxopropan-2-yl)amino)-4-methyl-1-oxopentan-2-yl)amino)-4-oxobutanoate;
or functional derivatives thereof with proven anti-diabetes activity.
[0084] Further functional derivatives of artemisinin or any of the specific artemisinin
compounds as described herein may be synthesized or can be identified by appropriate
screening technology employing a test for gephyrin binding or gephyrin agonistic activity.
[0085] Also preferred are active agents, which mimic the structure of an artemisinin compound
or another gephyrin binding partner, or which are specific ligands of gephyrin, like
agonistic antibodies or antibody fragments.
[0086] In one embodiment of the invention, the active agent is the only therapeutically
active agent administered to a subject, e.g. as a disease modifying or preventing
monotherapy.
[0087] In another embodiment, the active agent is combined with further active agents in
a cocktail, e.g. combined in a mixture or kit of parts, such that the cocktail contains
more than one therapeutically active agents administered to a subject, e.g. as a disease
modifying or preventing combination therapy.
[0088] Specifically, the active agent may also be administered in combination with one or
more other therapeutic or prophylactic agents, including but not limited to standard
treatment for treating the same target indication, e.g. active agents for treating
diabetes, including any of insulin, sulfonylureas, incretins, other secretagogues,
glitazones, metformin, GLP-1 agonists or DPP4 inhibitors, glucosidease inhibitors,
amylin analogs, SGLT2 inhibitors, gastric bypass surgery or pancreatic island transplantation.
[0089] In a combination therapy, the active agent may be administered as a mixture, or concomitantly
with one or more other therapeutic regimens, e.g. either before, simultaneously or
after concomitant therapy.
[0090] In certain embodiments, the methods of the invention include administering to a subject
a therapeutically effective amount of an active agent which is an active agent, like
an artemisinin compound or another gephyrin agonist of the invention in combination
with another pharmaceutically active agent or conventional treatment methods. Examples
of pharmaceutically active anti-diabetic compounds include insulin, sulfonylureas,
other secretagogues, glitazones, metformin or other bioguanides, GLP-1 agonists or
DPP4 inhibitors, other incretins, glucosidease inhibitors, amylin analogs, SGLT2 inhibitors,
gastric bypass surgery or pancreatic islet transplantation. The present invention,
further relates to kits comprising the active agent of the invention and drugs as
used for combination therapy.
[0091] The active agent of the invention and the other pharmaceutically active compound
may be administered to the subject in the same pharmaceutical composition or in different
pharmaceutical compositions, e.g. at the same time or at different times.
[0092] The term "Moco deficiency" refers to disease in lack of active sulfite oxidase, xanthine
dehydrogenase/oxidase, aldehyde oxidase or any further enzymes whose activity require
the presence and enough level of Molybdenum cofactor, irrespective of genesis. The
diagnosis of Moco deficiency includes, but is not limited to early seizures, low blood
levels of uric acid, and high levels of sulphite, xanthine, and uric acid in urine.
[0093] The term "temporal lobe epilepsy" is used to describe the recurrent epilepsy originiating
from temporal lobe. The temporal lobe is a region of the cerebral cortex that is located
beneath the lateral fissure on both cerebral hemispheres of the mammalian brain. The
epilepsy is a disorder of the brain characterized by an enduring predisposition to
generate epileptic seizures and by the neurobiologic, cognitive, psychological, and
social consequences of this condition. The definition of epilepsy requires the occurrence
of at least one epileptic seizure.
[0094] Moco deficiency is a inheritary disease with caused by mutation in MCOS1, MCOS2 or
gephyrin, leading to absence xanthine dehydrogenase/oxidase and aldehyde oxidase activity
(Reiss and Johnson, 2003). A few cases of Moco deficiency have been reported and only
one patient was cured so far. Due to the facts that there is no approved therapies
available for Moco deficienct, artemether, because of its agonistic effect of artemether
on gephyrin, has the potential to become the orphan drug for Moco deficiency.
[0095] Recent studies unveil the unique role of gephyrin in temporal lobe epilepsy. Low
level of gephyrin was detected in temporal lobe epilepsy patients as well as experimental
mouse model, and these might due to the unproper splicing of gephyrin mRNA. ( Forstera
et al., 2010). Based on our study, artemether treatment can increase the stability
of gephyrin in both mouse and human cells. These results show the possibility for
artemether to be involved in the therapies against temporal lobe epilepsy.
[0096] In a further another aspect of the invention, a method is provided to identify an
active agent suitable for anti-diabetic treatment. Functional assays involve the ex
vivo use of pancreatic cells, e.g. pancreatic alpha-cells or pancreatic beta-cells
that overexpresses ARX, to test if the test agent
- i) increases insulin expression by said cell; and/or
- ii) represses ARX in said cell; and/or
- iii) increases the level or clustering of gephyrin; and/or
- iv) increases gephyrin-mediated signaling of the GABAR.
[0097] Methods to determine gephyrin interaction, e.g. gephyrin agonistic activity in vitro
include co-purification, ELISA, co-immunoprecipitation, isothermal titration calorimitry,
differential scanning fluorimetry (Thermofluor), fluorescence polarization, fluorescence
resonance energy transfer, scintillation proximity assays and surface plasmon resonance
methods, and specifically a method capable of high throughput operation, for example
a chip-based method.
[0098] Compounds may as well be computer modeled into or on the gephyrin crystal structure.
Once potential modulating compounds are identified, the compounds may be screened
using in vitro, in vivo, or ex vivo cellular assays. Compounds identified in this
manner are useful as analogs of the preferred active agents of the invention.
[0099] The foregoing description will be more fully understood with reference to the following
examples. Such examples are, however, merely representative of methods of practicing
one or more embodiments of the present invention and should not be read as limiting
the scope of invention.
EXAMPLE
Materials and Methods
Reagents
[0100] Antibodies used in this project are insulin (Sigma 18510), glucagon (Sigma G2654),
Pax4 (R&D AF2614, Lot No.UZY0110121), Pax4 (Santa Cruz 98942, Lot No. H1610), Arx
(R&D AF7068, Lot No. CFOM0211121), Myc (Cell Signaling Technology CST2276, Lot 19),
Histone H2B (Cell Signaling Technology CST2934, Lot 1). Artemether and primers were
obtained from Sigma. The sequences of primers are indicated in Figure 7. Cy-3-labeled
donkey-α-guinea pig antibody from Jackson ImmunoResearch. All other fluorescently
labeled antibodies were purchased from Life Technologies Corporation.
Cell culture
[0101] Mouse pancreatic cell lines αTC1 (provided by Novo Nordisk) and βTC3 (provided by
Novo Nordisk) were grown in low-glucose DMEM supplemented by 10% FBS, 50U/mL penicillin
and 50 µg/mL streptomycin. Mouse pancreatic cell lines Min6 (provided by Novo Nordisk)
with Doxycycline inducible construct was grown in high-glucose DMEM supplemented by
15% Tet System Approved FBS (Clonetech 631106), 71 uM 2-mercaptoethanol, 50U/mL penicillin
and 50 ug/mL streptomycin. The cell culture for human islets followed established
protocols (Walpita et al., 2012).
High-through put screening
[0102] Compounds (50 nL) were transferred to black optical suitable 384-well plate (Corning
3712) from DMSO stock plates using acoustic transfer (Labcyte Inc.). Min6 cells (3000
cells per well) were plated in 50 ul media on top of the compounds. Three days after
treatment, cells were fixed in 3.7% formaldehyde for ten minutes at room temperature.
Following PBS washing, cells were fixed with cold pure methanol at -20 °C for 10 minutes,
permeabilized by 1% Triton X-100 in PBS for 30 minutes and blocked by 3% BSA in PBS
for 30 minutes. Twenty microliters of primary anti-insulin antibody, diluted in 1:2000
in 1.5% BSA, was added per well and incubated in 4 °C overnight. After washing with
PBS twice, 20 µL Cy-3-labeled donkey-α-guinea pig antibody diluted in 1:1000 and 10ug/mL
Hoechst 3342 in PBS was added per well and incubated for 1 h. After two washes with
PBS, plates were stored at 4 °C in the dark until analysis.
[0103] Images were taken by an automated microscope (Perkin Elmer Operetta) using a 20X
objective. Images were exposed for 10 ms in Hoechst channel and 500 ms in Alexa Fluor
548 channel. Images were analyzed by the Harmony (Perkin Elmer) software. Nuclei were
identified (Harmony Method C) and cytoplasm was defined based on the nuclei (Harmony
Method C). In total 1152 wells were screened containing 280 compounds from a collection
of clinical approved drugs with unique structure (CeMM, Vienna, Austria) in triplicates
with control wells. Hits were selected based on the intensity of insulin in the Alexa
Fluor 548 channel and cell numbers in the Hoechst channel.
RNA-seq
[0104] After incubation with or without doxycycline for 24, 72, and 144 h, cells were lysed
and RNA isolated using the RNeasy Mini Kit (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's
protocol. The library for RNA-seq was prepared with Ribo-zero Kit and Scriptseq v2
Kit (Epicenter) or by fully automatic robotic library preparation. The deep sequencing
was done at the Biomedical Sequencing Facility at CeMM. The raw data was aligned and
quantified by tophat and Bowtie 2.0.
RT-qPCR
[0105] After the RNA was isolated with RNeasy Mini Kit (Qiagen), it was reverse transcribed
with random primers using the High Capacity cDNA Reverse Transcription Kit (Applied
Biosystems). Quantitative PCR was performed with Power SYBR Green PCR Master Mix (Applied
Biosystems) on Lightcycler 480 qPCR machine (Roche).
Western blot
[0106] Whole cell extracts were generated by lysing cells in NP-40 buffer containing 150
mM sodium chloride, 1.0% NP-40 and 50 mM Tris, pH 8.0 supplemented by Protease Inhibitor
Cocktail (Roche). The whole-cell lysate (30 µg) was loaded onto a SDS-polyacrylamide
gel for electrophoresis at 30 mA per gel, and then transferred by electrophoresis
to a nitrocellulose membrane (GE Healthcare Life Science). All the blots were incubated
with the corresponding primary antibodies diluted in 1:1000 in 5% milk at 4 °C overnight
and with HRP-labeled secondary antibodies (diluted 1:20000) for 1 h. The signals were
detected using ECL Prime Western blotting Detection Reagent (Amersham).
Chemical proteomics
[0107] NMR spectra were recorded on a Bruker Avance III 400 (Bruker, Billerica, MA, U.S).
Chemical shifts are given in ppm, and coupling constants are given in hertz. Mass
spectra were recorded using a XeVo-UPLC-TQ-MS system (Waters, Milford, MA, U.S.).
Purification by flash column chromatography (FCC) was done using silica gel 60 (Merck,
Darmstadt, Germany), MPLC was performed on a Biotage Isolera system (Biotage, Uppsala,
Sweden). The purity of the synthesized compounds was determined and confirmed by UPLC
analysis.
[0108] All synthesis chemicals were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich and used without further
purification.
[0109] Drug-affinity matrices were prepared essentially as described previously (Huber et
al, 2014). Briefly, ethylenediamine (2.7 µL, 40 µmol), ethanolamine (9.7 µL, 160 µmol),
and triethylamine (15 µL, 108 µmol) were added to 500 µL NHS-activated Sepharose 4
Fast Flow beads (GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences AB, Uppsala, Sweden) and the reaction
was put on a rotary shaker for 24 h. Beads were washed and resuspended in DMSO and
NHS-activated artesunate (100 µL, 1.00 µmol) was added to the suspension, and the
mixture was put on a rotary shaker for 24 h. Unreacted beads were blocked by addition
of NHS-acetate (10 µmol) and triethylamine (25 µL, 180 µmol), followed by agitation
on a rotary shaker for 24 h. After washing with DMSO and lysis buffer, beads were
incubated with cell lysates.
[0110] Affinity chromatography and elution were performed in duplicate as reported previously
(Huber et al, 2014), using 10 mg total cell lysate as protein input per replicate.
[0111] After elution, enriched proteins were reduced with dithiothreitol, cysteine residues
alkylated by incubation with iodoacetamide and the samples digested with modified
porcine trypsin (Promega, Madison, WI). Three percent (and multiples thereof) of the
digested eluates were purified and concentrated by C18 reversed-phase material for
subsequent duplicate analysis by gel-free one-dimensional liquid chromatography mass
spectrometry (1 D-LCMS). Details of the LCMS methodology are as previously described.
[0112] Peak extraction and conversion of RAW files into the MGF format for subsequent protein
identification was performed with msconvert (ProteoWizard Library v2.1.2708). An initial
database search was performed with broader mass tolerance to re-calibrate the mass
lists for optimal final protein identification. For the initial protein database search,
Mascot version 2.3.02 (Matrix Science Ltd., London, UK) was used. Error tolerances
on the precursor and fragment ions were ±10 ppm and ±0.6 Da, respectively, and the
database search limited to fully-tryptic peptides with maximum 1 missed cleavage,
carbamidomethyl cysteine and methionine oxidation set as fixed and variable modifications,
respectively. The Mascot peptide ion score threshold was set to 30, and at least 3
peptide identifications per protein were required. Searches were performed against
the human UniProtKB/SwissProt database release 2012-05 including all protein isoforms.
[0113] The initial peptide identifications were used to deduce independent linear transformations
for precursor and fragment masses that would minimize the mean square deviation of
measured masses from theoretical. Re-calibrated mass list files were searched against
the same human protein database by a combination of Mascot and Phenyx (GeneBio, SA,
version 2.5.14) search engines using narrower mass tolerances (±4 ppm and ±0.3 Da).
One missed tryptic cleavage site was allowed. Carbamidomethyl cysteine was set as
a fixed modification and oxidized methionine was set as a variable modification. To
validate the proteins, Mascot and Phenyx output files were processed by internally-developed
parsers. Proteins with ≥2 unique peptides above a score T1, or with a single peptide
above a score T2 were selected as unambiguous identifications. Additional peptides
for these validated proteins with score > T3 were also accepted. For Mascot searches,
the following thresholds were used: T1=14, T2=40 and T3=10; Phenyx thresholds were
set to 4.2, 4.75 and 3.5, respectively (P-value < 10-3). The validated proteins retrieved
by the two algorithms were merged, any spectral conflicts discarded and grouped according
to shared peptides. A false discovery rate (FDR) of <1% for protein identifications
and <0.1% for peptides (including the ones exported with lower scores) was determined
by applying the same procedure against a database of reversed protein sequences.
[0114] Non-specific binders were filtered from the drug pull-downs using the SAINT software
(version 2.3.4).3 Using protein spectral counts as a measure of protein abundance
and comparing the data of a real pull-down versus the negative control experiments,
SAINT calculates the probability of a prey protein to be a real bait interactor. We
also compared SAINT probabilities with the fold-reduction of spectral count upon free
compound competition representing a magnitude of effect. Fold-reduction was computed
as the ratio of median spectral counts observed in pull-downs with/without competition.
In each condition, 4 spectral counts were available for the median (2 biological replicates
and 2 technical for each).
Statistical methods
[0115] All the p-values were calculated by student t test, unless specified as other methods.
The Gene ontology terms enrichment was performed using Gorilla.
Results
[0116] To discriminate cell-autonomous effects of Pax4 and Arx overexpression from phenotypes
that require paracrine and endocrine signaling in an islet microenvironment, we engineered
mouse beta cell line Min6 to allow inducible overexpression of PAX4, ARX or control
GFP (Fig. 1 a and Fig. 1 b). In these cell lines we measured the gene expression changes
induced by transcription factor overexpression for one (Fig 1c), three, and six days.
More than 800 genes were oppositely regulated by PAX4 and ARX at the early 24 h timepoint
indicative of direct regulation by the two factors (Fig. 1d). Interestingly, the endocrine
progenitor factor Ngn3 was among the top genes differentially regulated by the two
transcription factors. While PAX4 overexpression repressed Ngn3, ARX overexpression
transiently activated this factor (Fig. 1e and 1f). One possible explanation of Ngn3
activation is that beta cells acquire increased plasticity following ARX overexpression.
Furthermore, ARX induction repressed Pax4 after 24h and activated transcription of
several alpha cell genes including glucagon at the later time point of 6 days (Fig.
1g). These changes are indicative of our system faithfully modeling the beta to alpha
fate switch upon ARX overexpression which was previously only observed in animal models.
Thereby, we have generated a cellular system allowing high-throughput and high content
screening for functional repressors of ARX. To identify such compounds, we induced
ARX expression at the same time when we added compounds and then measured insulin
levels after 72 hours. In control DMSO-treated samples we observed a 50% drop in insulin
levels compared to uninduced cells (Fig. 2a). We then screened a library of 280 clinically
approved small molecules selected for their structural and target diversity. Hit compounds
were selected for their ability to maintain high insulin levels even in the presence
of ARX while not affecting cell viability (Fig. 2b). Interestingly, two artemisinins,
artemether and dihydroartemisinin, are among the top hits, fully inhibiting the ARX
overexpression phenotype. These are the only hit compounds that also induce insulin
and Pax4 expression in pancreatic alpha cells, as predicted for functional inhibitors
of ARX (Fig. 2c, d). Based on these findings, we investigated the effects of additional
artemisinin analogs in alpha and beta cells. While artesunate shows similar effects
(Fig. 3a), analogs lacking the endoperoxide moiety like Deoxyartemether showed no
effects on insulin expression in alpha cells (Fig. 3b). A dose-response assay indicated
half maximum effective concentrations below 1 uM in Min6 cells overexpressing ARX
(Fig. 3c) and below 10 uM in alpha cells (Fig. 3d).
[0117] Despite being widely used in the treatment of malaria, the molecular mechanism of
action of artemisinins is not clear. Different molecular targets have been proposed
including the oxidation of iron in human erythrocytes and the inhibition of the plasmodium
endoplasmatic reticulin Ca2+ ATPase SERCA (O'Neill et al., 2010). In addition, potent
effects of these compounds on mammalian cells are observed, and artemisinins have
been described as anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer agents. The effect of isolated
artemisinins in the pancreas has not yet been evaluated, but limited evidence exist
for positive effects of Artemisia extracts in human patients and in an animal models
of type 1 diabetes (Ahmad et al., 2014) . To identify the molecular mechanism of action
of artemisinins in pancreatic alpha cells, we used a chemical proteomics approach.
We coupled artesunate, an artemisinin active in alpha cells and Arx-overexpressing
beta cells, to solid support and performed pull-down experiments in the presence and
absence of competing free artemether (Fig. 4a). Mass spectrometry identified gephyrin
as the top specific interactor (Fig. 5b). Gephyrin exerts different functions including
enzymatic activity in the synthesis of the molybdenum cofactor MoCo, regulation of
mTOR signaling via interaction with RAFT1, and structural roles in the transport of
glycine and GABA receptors to the membrane. In an alpha cell line we observe a dose-dependent
increase of gephyrin protein levels following artemisinin treatment by Western blot
and immunofluorescence (Fig. 4c and Fig. 5a). This observation is suggestive an artemisinin-mediated
increase of gephyrin stability. In accordance, we observe increased MoCo synthesis
capacity in compound treated lysates (Fig. 4d). In line with the increased gephyrin
levels and clustering, we also observed higher intracellular chlorid ion concentrations
(Fig. 4e) and membrane occupancy of GABA receptor (Fig. 5b). RNA-Sequencing experiments
of alpha cells further underlined the effects of artemether on GABA receptor signaling.
Gene set enrichment analysis identifies the synaptic transmission process among the
significantly altered pathways, and we observed a significant upregulation of genes
Nrxn3, Sv2b and Shc3 in the pathway (Fig. 5c). Interestingly, GABA has been proposed
as a factor that can reverse diabetes by induction of beta cell proliferation (Soltani
et al., 2011). To prove that GABA receptor signaling play a role in the mechanism
of action of artemisinins in pancreatic alpha cells, we combined artemether with bicuculline
(Fig. 5d) or gabazine (Fig. 5e), two GABA receptor antagonists. The presence of GABA
receptor antagonists inhibited the effects of artemether in TC1 cells. Importantly,
the treatment of thiagabine, a GABAR agonist, also increased the insulin expression
in alpha cells (Fig. 5f). To characterize the relevance of our finding for human biology,
we examined the effects of artemether in human primary pancreatic islets. In line
with the findings in mouse cell lines, we observed increased levels of gephyrin protein
(Fig. 6b) and increased membrane staining for GABA receptor (Fig. 6c). 3-day treatment
with artemether increased the number of double-positive cells expressing both insulin
and glucagon (Fig. 6a,d). On the gene expression level, artemether-treated islet cultures
overall dramatically reduced the expression of alpha cell factors ARX and PPY, while
there is slightly increased expression of beta cell factors including PAX6 and PAX4.
[0118] Artemisinin combination therapy is the treatment of choice for malaria and more than
300 million treatments are dispensed annually. Despite this large patient cohort,
no clinical data on the effects of artemisinins on human pancreatic endocrine function
have been published and for several reasons such might have gone unnoticed so far.
The acute life-threatening condition of plasmodium infected patients together with
the known propensity of plasmodium infection to cause hypoglycemia make blood glucose
levels highly variable in the short term. Furthermore, in healthy individuals even
a dramatic increase in beta cell number is not expected to cause a phenotype, as they
only secrete insulin in a glucose-regulated manner. Unfortunately, currently no imaging
methods are available to directly assess human beta cell mass. The ideal subject to
study artemisinin effects on pancreatic function would be a type 1 diabetes patient
with a complete absence of detectable insulin C-peptide, a condition that affects
approximate 60% of T1 D patients or one in 1500 children. We are currently trying
to obtain blood samples from such patients who additionally are infected for malaria
and receive treatment with artemisinin combination therapies. If artemsinins also
induce transdifferentiation, we expect to be able to detect C-peptide in post-treatment
blood samples but not in samples taken at diagnosis.
[0119] The short treatment cycle, negative effects of the plasmodium or other drugs in combination
treatment or achievable artemisinin levels in the pancreas might still limit the clinical
usefulness in this setting. However, even in that case our findings open up completely
new avenues for drug discovery towards a treatment for type 1 diabetes by transdifferentiating
alpha to beta cells. These could include structurally different gephyrin stabilizers
but also compounds that target other players in the GABA receptor signaling pathway.
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